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So far Karen Bussolini has created 126 blog entries.

Make Your Own Herb Salt

Make your own herb salt and you’ll never have to wait for an occasion special enough to dip into such a costly condiment. Read how Karen Bussolini makes fast and easy herb salt with cheap, organic herbs that she grows herself.

By |2020-02-11T10:38:26-05:00August 28th, 2019|Categories: How-To's|Comments Off on Make Your Own Herb Salt

A Perennially Changing Garden

I love the way everything about my sunny sideyard garden changes throughout the growing season. And I love the act of artful (and occasionally ruthless) tweaking.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:08-04:00August 3rd, 2019|Categories: Views|Comments Off on A Perennially Changing Garden

Reduce Artificial Light at Night

Moths are drawn to light. They exhaust themselves flying toward strong security lights and die or get picked off by predators (bats, birds, rats, mice). More than 60% of invertebrates are nocturnal. The Xerces Society’s advice on being thoughtful about night lighting to help fireflies helps a lot of insects - and saves energy too.

By |2020-01-31T12:26:07-05:00July 25th, 2019|Categories: Garden Coaching, How-To's|Comments Off on Reduce Artificial Light at Night

Which Native Plants Support the Most Life?

How do we support resilient local food webs? Entomologist Doug Tallamy notes that caterpillars transfer energy into the food web better than anything else, so we need to increase their numbers. Dr. Tallamy's research shows that some native plants are more ecologically productive too, that 5% of our native plants make 75% of the food that drives food webs.

By |2020-02-11T10:41:45-05:00July 15th, 2019|Categories: Clues, Garden Coaching, Great Plants|Comments Off on Which Native Plants Support the Most Life?

Restoring Insects to Our Landscapes – Every Yard Counts

Curiosity about how things really work in nature led me to world of environmental scientists who deal in facts, not just feelings. The more I learn from them, the more I know that what we do at home makes a difference (positive or negative) and that every yard counts. Entomologist Doug Tallamy has given substance and urgency to the importance of restoring insects to our landscapes. He speaks eloquently on “Restoring the Little Things That Run the World” (i.e. insects).

By |2020-07-01T15:51:08-04:00July 2nd, 2019|Categories: Garden Coaching, Views|Comments Off on Restoring Insects to Our Landscapes – Every Yard Counts

Plant a Menagerie for Kids

If we want to share our love of gardening with the kids in our lives, we need to give them something fun to remember. Tickle their fancy with plants named after the animals they resemble - in a pot, in a plot or as a secret to share.  Bat-faced cuphea (Cuphea llavea) Lamb’s ears (Stachys [...]

By |2020-02-11T10:43:36-05:00June 28th, 2019|Categories: How-To's|Comments Off on Plant a Menagerie for Kids

Jazz Up Your Gardens With Contrasting Textures and Colored Foliage

If you can’t please yourself in your own garden, where can you? Why put up with plants that just sit there without speaking to each other - or to you? If a home landscape conveys all the charm and originality of a heavily mulched McDonald’s parking lot (minus cigarette butts), it’s time to fill in with more plants, more color and more contrast to make it more personal and exciting.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:08-04:00June 20th, 2019|Categories: Clues, Garden Coaching|Comments Off on Jazz Up Your Gardens With Contrasting Textures and Colored Foliage

Planting Memories, Sharing Plants

My gardens are alive with memories of plants and people. When grandpa’s peonies bloom every June, deep-in-my-bones recollections come bubbling up. Even as a toddler, I was irresistibly drawn to the gigantic compost pile inside a crumbling old stone foundation behind his barn. Lusciously fragrant, audaciously magenta peonies bloomed beside the steaming, teeming life-filled mound.Maybe that’s where I caught the gardening bug so early on.

By |2020-07-01T15:51:08-04:00June 12th, 2019|Categories: Views|Comments Off on Planting Memories, Sharing Plants